The remarkable separation which the two edges of a wound experience, that is made by a cutting instrument, is owing to the contractility of texture. This separation which takes place upon the dead body, proves what we have already often remarked, viz. that the properties of texture, absolutely inherent in the organic texture, are foreign to the vital forces from which they only borrow an increase of energy; thus the cutaneous retraction is much stronger during life in a longitudinal or transverse wound. But it is particularly in amputation that we observe this increase of contractility from the vital action. No part, not even the muscles retract so much as the skin; hence the precept so much recommended in this operation of saving the integuments as much as possible; hence the essential modifications that have been made in the ancient methods. The muscular retraction is more sudden; but this, which is more durable, ultimately prevails; so that in the ancient mode of amputation, where every part was cut at the same level, they had a conical stump, the summit of which was formed by the bone, in which was next seen the muscles, arteries, &c. and in which the skin representing the base, terminated on the side of the limb.
There are however many cases in which the dermoid extensibility is less than it at first seems to be. For example, in large sarcoceles, the skin of the neighbouring parts of the scrotum being drawn, is applied upon the tumour, and makes up for the extensibility that is wanting in the skin of this part; that of the penis especially is almost wholly employed to cover the tumour; so that this organ disappears. It is to the limits placed to the cutaneous extensibility that must also be referred the following phenomenon; in a wound with loss of substance, the fleshy granulations, in contracting by the evacuation of the white substance that filled them, draw the neighbouring skin in order to cover the wound; now this drawing produces not only an extension but a real locomotion. Hence why when the skin, naturally tense and adherent, cannot yield to this locomotion, the cicatrices are formed with so much difficulty, as we see upon the cranium, the sternum, &c.; why on the contrary on the scrotum, the fold of the axilla, &c. they take place with so little; why in dissecting out tumours, it is so much recommended to save the sound integuments, &c.
When the skin is stretched, the fibres which compose the spaces that have been spoken of, separate from each other, and these spaces become broader. Their breadth becomes especially evident on the internal surface of the dermis; for as all the pores of the external surface pierce obliquely its texture, the distension of this texture only diminishes the length of the small canal they form, but does not enlarge the orifice of it; thus whilst the internal surface contains interstices of considerable size, this remains uniform, but allows us to see these interstices, which render it more transparent where they exist; hence that appearance like marble on the skin of the abdomen of women who have had many children.
When the skin is contracted, the internal spaces are drawn together and even effaced. The external surface which has none of these, cannot diminish so much in breadth, so that there is a disproportion in the breadth of the internal and external surface; hence, as I have said, the convexity of the latter in the horny hardening produced by boiling water; hence also the inequalities and external roughness which takes place when cold acts powerfully upon us, and which contracts the dermoid texture. Besides, this phenomenon only takes place when the contractility is evident in the ordinary state; for if there has been previous distention, the cells already enlarged, return only in contracting to their natural state, and there is no disproportion in the extent of the internal and external surfaces of the skin.
In most of the extensions, there is a diminution of the thickness of the dermoid texture. It is only when it is dilated by the infiltration of water in its spaces, as in leucophlegmasia, that it increases in thickness by diminishing in density. In chronic inflammation, in engorgement, and in various alterations of which the dermoid texture is the seat, it loses in part the faculty of stretching; it breaks with ease when it is distended. This is what happens in some aneurisms, in those of the aorta especially that have produced an absorption of the sternum. A slow inflammation seizes upon the skin that covers the tumour, and it breaks with a degree of distention infinitely below what it bears in a sound state, if the death of the patient does not prevent this fatal rupture, two examples of which I have seen in the ward of lying in women at the Hôtel Dieu. In this state of inflammation, the distention is very painful, whilst it is not so in the ordinary state.
The skin loses also its contractile power in most of the chronic affections of which it is the seat, and which alter its texture.
Are there some days in which the skin is more contracted, and others in which it is looser and more expanded? I believe so, from observing the marks left after small-pox, which are much more apparent and deeper some days than others.
II. Vital Properties.
These are strongly marked in this system. We might say, that nature by giving an excess of life to this dermoid covering, has wished to establish a striking line of demarcation, and to make us perceive the difference between the inorganic bodies with which its external surface is in contact, and the organized textures that its internal surface covers. I shall consider these vital properties as in all the other systems; some belong to animal life and others to organic.